Thursday, August 16, 2007

Things I’ve never lived before

In 2 days I am living Rwanda … except the things I already mentioned before in the past week I went through amazing moments.

One of them was the second national conference ever done by AIESEC in Rwanda which I chaired. We came up with a Rwandese word to name it “Haguruka!” which means “Stand up!”; as delegates we had Rwandese members but also international delegates from Uganda J ; facilitators were MC & 3 national support team members and some of the delegates from Uganda. For most delegates & facilitators was their first AIESEC conference so it had to boost their spirit and motivation to work in AIESEC. The venue was the Univesity’s classes, on Friday we only had the Opening Plenary, on Saturday we started around 10 and finished at 6 p.m., on Sunday we started at 2 p.m. in order to allow people to go to church in the morning.

I did a lot of back up work and out of 14 hours of agenda I delivered 8 as just 4 other people had knowledge to deliver a session. The atmosphere builded up througout these days and at the end we had a beautiful closing plenary with traditional Rwandese dance, a role-call from Ugandan delegates, sugar-cubes, unveiling the secret friends and finally having a “Haguruka!” dance. The members liked it a lot and are very motivated while I had the most energy-consuming and emotionally demanding experience in my life.

Something I really didn’t expect was to hear & see the people from Uganda very shocked of the big differences between their country & Rwanda … I initially thought they are very similar …

On Tuesday I went for a visit to Gisenyi, probably the 5th most developed city in the country, a place locally known for its touristic attraction. It is on Kivu Lake and has a nice beach but not a lot of sun J as it is close to a big vulcano which I could see at distance after rain. While walking with my companion along the lake we were attracted by some nice houses and planes landing and taking off we could see ahead. While walking in that direction we were surprised to find a barrier, it turned out to be the border with Congo!!! We had to go back as we didn’t have our passports with us so we asked for a place were we can have a drink on a nice terrase and we were recommended to go to Goma, in Congo, the city we were heading just before. As we couldn’t go there we went to “Tam Tam” a place next to the beach where we were the only customers. I ordered a beer and I got a 72 cl one, another time I ordered an Amstel and the waiter brought 2 as they consider it too small (33 cl) so they bring 2 of them J

On the 15th of August we were still in Gisenyi and it was a holly day, Saint Mary, so normally people were not supposed to work but go to church. At 5 a.m. we were waken up by the Muslim prayers from the mosque just across the street we were staying. We went up the hill on the path many locals take every day, we found a lot of banana trees, poor houses, small goats and children screaming “muzungu!” when they saw me; for sure there weren’t a lot of white people on that hill before. Just some hours later we were in the most fancy place in town, Serena Hotel, and the difference is huge, for 1 night here you pay the amount a person up the hill would live from for 2 months probably.

The landscape to Gisenyi is impressive: poor villages and cities, a lot of banana, mango and avocado trees, tea, potato, cabbage and coffee plantations, hills everywhere you look, people on the streets, vulcanoes and volcano rocks. All these together with impressive 4x4 cars, commercials for banks, Guinness or mobiles.

For photos, check my 2 albums from Rwanda: http://www.facebook.com/photos.php?id=503656679

See you sometime, somewhere!

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